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bouche

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Everything posted by bouche

  1. thx, I found that guy but wasn't convinced that Tavis Trance and Travis E. Triance were the same people. I didn't read far enough to see the Barr connection. nice typing Black Sheep!
  2. Try out the chat (up top) if you're watching a cast and want to call shit or whatever. There's room for 5 chat spots.
  3. Scofield tonight! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-U723c17LVo
  4. Tickets here I don't know who Tavis Trance is… anyone?
  5. that was a fun treat for today. It was just under an hour set I think. Little Lover Valhallas Come in the Water Half Crazy How the heroine dies (thanks Phorbesie!) Love Ain't Enough
  6. Nice to hear. I wish I could have been in there. Barr Brothers are playing again at noon. Mystery concert!
  7. are we sure there was a rabbit though?
  8. Go here for more photos 20 minutes after the soft-opening of the 2016 edition of the Ottawa Jazz Festival kicked-off, the first song of nearly a 2 hour set by Kamasi Washington and his dynamically led band had finished their first number. Kamasi thanked and welcomed the crowd to tremendous applause, and began his evening long pattern of personal storytelling. Of how he met each of his band mates, how they affected him musically, and why they are here. “ It’s not what you have in life, it’s what you do in life that’s important ” He introduced a song that he wrote about his grandmother while also inviting his father, who "taught me everything I know" to the stage. Kamasi mentioned that his mother always said "It's not what you have in life, it's what you do in life that's important", and he followed that theme throughout the evening. What he did up until this point was to get real good at what he does. At playing the sax, at composing music, at producing albums, and on display this night, band leading while directing focus on some of the works of the masters in his ensemble. Kamasi told the story of meeting trombonist Ryan Porter back when he was in school. This story described how he heard the most emotional playing he'd ever heard in the hallway. Expecting to find an old 87 year old man who lost 3 wives and 7 grandchildren, he was surprised when he came upon Ryan. He asked "what happened to you man? where's all this coming from?". Ryan responded "This morning, I wanted to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. Turned out, I was out of bread." That's when Kamasi knew he had to play with this guy. Then he introduced a song composed by Porter and tore the place up. Miles Mosely, who balanced against his upright bass which also sported his Twitter callsign @milesmosely on the massive pick guard, was introduced as the greatest bassist on the planet, "though I've heard there is someone on Mars". Miles was then featured for one of his own songs on an upcoming album "Abraham" (due in September). He started working the bass with a bow, then added some wah pedal (that's when it was evident that he had a string of electronics to play with as well), added a bit of distortion, began shredding a bit, started singing while grooving as the band joined in to complete this powerful fucking jam. It was incredibly dynamic. It started so delicate and quiet and just exploded into fireworks. The drummers were also featured prominently, and both were stars in the stories of Kamasi. Tony Austin as the 4 year-older super cool guy, when Kamasi was only 8 (they watched ninja turtles together), and Ronald Bruner Jr. was the baby prodigy drummer when Kamasi thought his own three-year-old self was the supreme shit on drums only to be surpassed by a baby at a birthday party. "Hey, let the baby play your drums." "Ah shit! no man. He's still in diapers. What if something happens?" Both were given some time together on stage to "talk. as drummers do". Both tossed out impressive solos after passing beats back and forth. The dual drummer setup has been done many times, but these two literally made stereophonic sounds they way they countered each other. Imagine hearing one snare in your left ear, and one in your right, back and forth at differing rhythms…that's what they sounded like, except they had around 30 pieces (give or take) of drums between the two. Kamasi's father, Rickey Washington, performed between Kamasi and vocalist Patrice Quinn for most of the evening. When he wasn't playing flute or soprano sax, he was grooving and grinning to the music. Patrice spent most of the evening dancing and sometimes providing some scatted unison over some of the horn lines. She was reminiscent of a dancing Donna (grateful dead) however, this lady can SING. She performed the song written about Kamasis grandmother, and at least 2 others. One other was called " ", and it actually may have a few times throughout that song and the evening in very complicated ways. Brandon Coleman really filled in the grooves and many times sounded like a funky guitarist on that Nord keyboard or Rhodes maybe. Speaking of guitar, yes, he also picked up one of those keyboards you hold like a guitar. The left hand seemed to be controlling pitch and voicing but it looked alot like he was fingering notes on a guitar. Not sure how that thing works but it was really fascinating. Kamasi Washington's mashup of funk, soul, R&B all rooted with master-level jazz was a super treat. It didn't feel anything like any other night of standard jazz. It was pure spectacle, incomprehensible talent that made everything seem effortless. It was powerful musically and emotionally. If there were no seats, the crowd would have been bouncing all night. Chair dancing came naturally. What he did in life tonight was open the audience members attention up to his ensemble, his history, his family, and where his music comes from, where it's going, and where they are all going. It seems clear that this was a special night and the intimate vibe of a smallish venue may be difficult to experience again as this band leader continues to impress everyone that is fortunate enough to experience him perform.
  9. I don't know what happened to that 'slideshow'. It's not working now. I embedded flickr images and it either linked to the gallery or I could flip through the photos in the post. Stupid internet. https://flic.kr/s/aHskCLjXry
  10. I learned today that I needed to request a pass for the NAC Theatre performances way earlier than I had thought. I asked today about the show and was told that they'd see what they could do. It would be a popular show and entry would be unlikely. An hour later I had an email with an e-ticket from the super kind media rep. I was let in just before gold pass holders, to my surprise, and grabbed an aisle seat in the front row. Photographers were instructed that we had 20 minutes (1 song lol) to get what we needed and to take our seats. The caveat was once that we parked for photos, we couldn't move. I noticed from the seat that I would have a very tight frame to shoot with so I moved over to the far left aisle (centre aisles were banned) and sat on a stair. I had one angle, but was able to get a good sense of the stage, albeit with little composition options. I'd only heard of Kamasi the last month or so as people continually mentioned him as a show to catch. I spaced until today, but was glad I asked and showed up with a camera. After about 15 minutes from the opening blasts, I sat down with my seat neighbours and had many mind-blowing moments as he cycled through the musicians and gave them some time to show off their own compositions. Kamasi is a great MC for a show. Lots of personal stories, punched up with humour, connecting him with everyone in the band, including his father who joined them for about 1/2 the set on flute and soprano sax (or a form of clarinet?).
  11. I was there just after noon and dude wasn't quite open in that plaza. I'm heading down and hoping traffic and parking on the east side of the canal ain't a pain. #sinkhole
  12. Was informed that there was no cumberland. That slot was New Speedway Boogie. I did have a clip of NSB so there was some evidence. I could have sworn I heard some cumberland too thinking back.
  13. not for me but still, $27 to see what Jack Bauer does when he's not defusing bombs and stopping terror. http://kiefersutherlandmusic.com
  14. Here I thought no one would every try and top The Anthology series. I guess it's time for some updated info on what's going on with them these days.
  15. Has anyone heard of this documentary coming out? I just got an email about it and wondered why I hadn't heard of it before.
  16. I added a collection of videos here. I figured I'd add a couple of paragraphs to try and explain the video. http://www.blog.jambands.ca/blog/2016/6/18/barr-brothers-and-friends-perform-les-chansons-de-grateful-dead
  17. Here's Dave-O's consolidated setlist: The other one (Jason Sharp Colin Stetson solo) Brown eyed women (Brad vocals) Tennessee Jed (Katie Moore) Box of Rain (Katie Brad Joe vocals) Ripple (single mic) Easy wind (w/ Peter Mika and someone else?) Me and my uncle Sugaree (w/ Steve Hill) > Scarlet Mexicali (solo piano) Dire Wolf (notre Dame de Grace) New Speedway Boogie Cumberland (lil Andy) FOD (lil Andy w/JG on pedal steel) - arrangement was different than anything I've ever heard Casey (Andy) - arrangement was LIT St Stephen (Brad) > Drums Space ChinaDoll (Joe vocals) Truckin (w/ everybody) Brokedown palace (Brad Joe Katie) Bid you goodnight
  18. Improved headline - "Bob Dylan's band obliges annoying fan in Berkeley by playing freebird breakdown"
  19. all the clips joined together comes out to 31 minutes. I thought I was taking short clips.
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